• Terry Kovac, 49, of Las Vegas, Nev., sentenced to 37 years in custody followed by five years of supervised release

• Felipe Dominguez-Meija, 31, of Springdale, Ark., sentenced to 41 years in custody followed by five years of supervised release

• Noel Eisley, 37, of Wappinger Falls, N.Y., sentenced to 35 years in custody followed by 10 years of supervised release

• Eric Robinson, 42, of Duluth, Minn, sentenced to 34 years in custody followed by 10 years of supervised release

• Bret Massey, 47, of Portland, Maine, sentenced to 32 years in custody followed by 10 years of supervised release

• William Phillips, 39, of Highland Park, New York, sentenced to 33 years in custody followed by five years of supervised release. The sentence will run concurrent to a sentence he received in a previous similar case.

Each man was ordered to pay $5,000 in restitution to each identified victim.

According to the Schneider's office, the men recruited the victims by pretending to be teenage boys who wanted to chat with them in real-time. Once the victims entered chat rooms, the men worked to build their trust and then convinced them to engage in sexual activity on camera.

They recorded tens of thousands of sexually explicit videos — which they shared with each other — of minors, some as young as 11 years old, authorities said. There were more than 100 victims. So far, the FBI has been able to identify 48 victims in the U.S.

The FBI’s Detroit Field Office and the Southeast Michigan Trafficking and Exploitation Crimes task force investigated the case.